I'm not sure if this is in the right place, but I may as well use it.
Okay:
My problem. I want to know what happens if someone is bleeding alot and a paramedic comes over. I want to know what they would say and do and I also want to know how they would treat you in a hospital.

I hope you understood that, probably you didn't. But still... I need the information for a story I'm doing at school. Sorry to bother you!

Depends on where the bleeding is coming from and how much. I am assuming the bleeding is profuse. If the wound is bleeding from a vein, they would probably apply direct pressure to the wound, start an i.v. in the arm, and start pumping in type O-negative blood. Once at the hospital, they would suture the wound and give blood as needed. If the cut is deep enough, they can suture the vein itself internally and close the skin with a separate set of stitches on the skin. If the wound is to an artery, they would probably tourniquet any appendage that was bleeding. For a neck or chest wound, they would clamp off the artery. They would i.v. type O-neg blood. At the hospital (assuming you lived that long), they would continue giving blood, and would repair the damaged artery and then close the skin. For an arterial bleed, you don't have a whole lot of time before bleeding out. For a vein, you can bleed for a relatively long time without dying.

As for what the paramedics would say, depends on who they are talking to. TO the patietn it would be, "Don't worry, you'll be fine." To eachother, they would probably give orders. "You, apply pressure." "Get me a hypo of lidocaine" (lidocaine numbs you up to give you i.v. They may ask for suction, or a pack of blood. Things like that.

I've never been treated by paramedics for bleeding, so this is mostly from med shows,first aid, and what I know of getting patched up in the er a couple times. I hope it helps.

Also, if it was a head wound, any type of bleeding is considered to be unhealthy. I knew a woman who once tripped on the floor, thought nothing of it, but her head was bleeding. Fortunately, her employer forced her to go the doctor and she ended up having several stitches.

Also, in some cases, there are medical conditions where your blood is so thin that you end up bleeding profusely. Diabetes and cirrhosis come to mind straight off.

Ubi caritas est vera, Deus ibi est.

"The mark of your ignorance is the depth of your belief in injustice and tragedy. What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the Master calls the butterfly." ~ Richard Bach

Yea, but something tells me, if I have a huge gaping hole in a part of my body and am flooding the area with my own blood, common sense would dictate that I will not survive, no matter what they tell me.

"He who takes a life...it is as if he has destroyed an entire world....but he who saves one life, it is as if he has saved the world entire" Talmud Sanhedrin 4:5